1 1. Prerequisites 2 ---------------- 3 4 You will need working installations of Zlib and OpenSSL. 5 6 Zlib 1.1.4 or 1.2.1.2 or greater (ealier 1.2.x versions have problems): 7 http://www.gzip.org/zlib/ 8 9 OpenSSL 0.9.6 or greater: 10 http://www.openssl.org/ 11 12 (OpenSSL 0.9.5a is partially supported, but some ciphers (SSH protocol 1 13 Blowfish) do not work correctly.) 14 15 The remaining items are optional. 16 17 NB. If you operating system supports /dev/random, you should configure 18 OpenSSL to use it. OpenSSH relies on OpenSSL's direct support of 19 /dev/random, or failing that, either prngd or egd 20 21 PRNGD: 22 23 If your system lacks kernel-based random collection, the use of Lutz 24 Jaenicke's PRNGd is recommended. 25 26 http://prngd.sourceforge.net/ 27 28 EGD: 29 30 The Entropy Gathering Daemon (EGD) is supported if you have a system which 31 lacks /dev/random and don't want to use OpenSSH's internal entropy collection. 32 33 http://www.lothar.com/tech/crypto/ 34 35 PAM: 36 37 OpenSSH can utilise Pluggable Authentication Modules (PAM) if your 38 system supports it. PAM is standard most Linux distributions, Solaris, 39 HP-UX 11, AIX >= 5.2, FreeBSD and NetBSD. 40 41 Information about the various PAM implementations are available: 42 43 Solaris PAM: http://www.sun.com/software/solaris/pam/ 44 Linux PAM: http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/ 45 OpenPAM: http://www.openpam.org/ 46 47 If you wish to build the GNOME passphrase requester, you will need the GNOME 48 libraries and headers. 49 50 GNOME: 51 http://www.gnome.org/ 52 53 Alternatively, Jim Knoble <jmknoble (a] pobox.com> has written an excellent X11 54 passphrase requester. This is maintained separately at: 55 56 http://www.jmknoble.net/software/x11-ssh-askpass/ 57 58 TCP Wrappers: 59 60 If you wish to use the TCP wrappers functionality you will need at least 61 tcpd.h and libwrap.a, either in the standard include and library paths, 62 or in the directory specified by --with-tcp-wrappers. Version 7.6 is 63 known to work. 64 65 http://ftp.porcupine.org/pub/security/index.html 66 67 S/Key Libraries: 68 69 If you wish to use --with-skey then you will need the library below 70 installed. No other S/Key library is currently known to be supported. 71 72 http://www.sparc.spb.su/solaris/skey/ 73 74 LibEdit: 75 76 sftp supports command-line editing via NetBSD's libedit. If your platform 77 has it available natively you can use that, alternatively you might try 78 these multi-platform ports: 79 80 http://www.thrysoee.dk/editline/ 81 http://sourceforge.net/projects/libedit/ 82 83 Autoconf: 84 85 If you modify configure.ac or configure doesn't exist (eg if you checked 86 the code out of CVS yourself) then you will need autoconf-2.61 to rebuild 87 the automatically generated files by running "autoreconf". Earlier 88 versions may also work but this is not guaranteed. 89 90 http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/ 91 92 Basic Security Module (BSM): 93 94 Native BSM support is know to exist in Solaris from at least 2.5.1, 95 FreeBSD 6.1 and OS X. Alternatively, you may use the OpenBSM 96 implementation (http://www.openbsm.org). 97 98 99 2. Building / Installation 100 -------------------------- 101 102 To install OpenSSH with default options: 103 104 ./configure 105 make 106 make install 107 108 This will install the OpenSSH binaries in /usr/local/bin, configuration files 109 in /usr/local/etc, the server in /usr/local/sbin, etc. To specify a different 110 installation prefix, use the --prefix option to configure: 111 112 ./configure --prefix=/opt 113 make 114 make install 115 116 Will install OpenSSH in /opt/{bin,etc,lib,sbin}. You can also override 117 specific paths, for example: 118 119 ./configure --prefix=/opt --sysconfdir=/etc/ssh 120 make 121 make install 122 123 This will install the binaries in /opt/{bin,lib,sbin}, but will place the 124 configuration files in /etc/ssh. 125 126 If you are using Privilege Separation (which is enabled by default) 127 then you will also need to create the user, group and directory used by 128 sshd for privilege separation. See README.privsep for details. 129 130 If you are using PAM, you may need to manually install a PAM control 131 file as "/etc/pam.d/sshd" (or wherever your system prefers to keep 132 them). Note that the service name used to start PAM is __progname, 133 which is the basename of the path of your sshd (e.g., the service name 134 for /usr/sbin/osshd will be osshd). If you have renamed your sshd 135 executable, your PAM configuration may need to be modified. 136 137 A generic PAM configuration is included as "contrib/sshd.pam.generic", 138 you may need to edit it before using it on your system. If you are 139 using a recent version of Red Hat Linux, the config file in 140 contrib/redhat/sshd.pam should be more useful. Failure to install a 141 valid PAM file may result in an inability to use password 142 authentication. On HP-UX 11 and Solaris, the standard /etc/pam.conf 143 configuration will work with sshd (sshd will match the other service 144 name). 145 146 There are a few other options to the configure script: 147 148 --with-audit=[module] enable additional auditing via the specified module. 149 Currently, drivers for "debug" (additional info via syslog) and "bsm" 150 (Sun's Basic Security Module) are supported. 151 152 --with-pam enables PAM support. If PAM support is compiled in, it must 153 also be enabled in sshd_config (refer to the UsePAM directive). 154 155 --with-prngd-socket=/some/file allows you to enable EGD or PRNGD 156 support and to specify a PRNGd socket. Use this if your Unix lacks 157 /dev/random and you don't want to use OpenSSH's builtin entropy 158 collection support. 159 160 --with-prngd-port=portnum allows you to enable EGD or PRNGD support 161 and to specify a EGD localhost TCP port. Use this if your Unix lacks 162 /dev/random and you don't want to use OpenSSH's builtin entropy 163 collection support. 164 165 --with-lastlog=FILE will specify the location of the lastlog file. 166 ./configure searches a few locations for lastlog, but may not find 167 it if lastlog is installed in a different place. 168 169 --without-lastlog will disable lastlog support entirely. 170 171 --with-osfsia, --without-osfsia will enable or disable OSF1's Security 172 Integration Architecture. The default for OSF1 machines is enable. 173 174 --with-skey=PATH will enable S/Key one time password support. You will 175 need the S/Key libraries and header files installed for this to work. 176 177 --with-tcp-wrappers will enable TCP Wrappers (/etc/hosts.allow|deny) 178 support. 179 180 --with-md5-passwords will enable the use of MD5 passwords. Enable this 181 if your operating system uses MD5 passwords and the system crypt() does 182 not support them directly (see the crypt(3/3c) man page). If enabled, the 183 resulting binary will support both MD5 and traditional crypt passwords. 184 185 --with-utmpx enables utmpx support. utmpx support is automatic for 186 some platforms. 187 188 --without-shadow disables shadow password support. 189 190 --with-ipaddr-display forces the use of a numeric IP address in the 191 $DISPLAY environment variable. Some broken systems need this. 192 193 --with-default-path=PATH allows you to specify a default $PATH for sessions 194 started by sshd. This replaces the standard path entirely. 195 196 --with-pid-dir=PATH specifies the directory in which the sshd.pid file is 197 created. 198 199 --with-xauth=PATH specifies the location of the xauth binary 200 201 --with-ssl-dir=DIR allows you to specify where your OpenSSL libraries 202 are installed. 203 204 --with-ssl-engine enables OpenSSL's (hardware) ENGINE support 205 206 --with-4in6 Check for IPv4 in IPv6 mapped addresses and convert them to 207 real (AF_INET) IPv4 addresses. Works around some quirks on Linux. 208 209 If you need to pass special options to the compiler or linker, you 210 can specify these as environment variables before running ./configure. 211 For example: 212 213 CFLAGS="-O -m486" LDFLAGS="-s" LIBS="-lrubbish" LD="/usr/foo/ld" ./configure 214 215 3. Configuration 216 ---------------- 217 218 The runtime configuration files are installed by in ${prefix}/etc or 219 whatever you specified as your --sysconfdir (/usr/local/etc by default). 220 221 The default configuration should be instantly usable, though you should 222 review it to ensure that it matches your security requirements. 223 224 To generate a host key, run "make host-key". Alternately you can do so 225 manually using the following commands: 226 227 ssh-keygen -t rsa1 -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_key -N "" 228 ssh-keygen -t rsa -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_rsa_key -N "" 229 ssh-keygen -t dsa -f /etc/ssh/ssh_host_dsa_key -N "" 230 231 Replacing /etc/ssh with the correct path to the configuration directory. 232 (${prefix}/etc or whatever you specified with --sysconfdir during 233 configuration) 234 235 If you have configured OpenSSH with EGD support, ensure that EGD is 236 running and has collected some Entropy. 237 238 For more information on configuration, please refer to the manual pages 239 for sshd, ssh and ssh-agent. 240 241 4. (Optional) Send survey 242 ------------------------- 243 244 $ make survey 245 [check the contents of the file "survey" to ensure there's no information 246 that you consider sensitive] 247 $ make send-survey 248 249 This will send configuration information for the currently configured 250 host to a survey address. This will help determine which configurations 251 are actually in use, and what valid combinations of configure options 252 exist. The raw data is available only to the OpenSSH developers, however 253 summary data may be published. 254 255 5. Problems? 256 ------------ 257 258 If you experience problems compiling, installing or running OpenSSH. 259 Please refer to the "reporting bugs" section of the webpage at 260 http://www.openssh.com/ 261 262 263 $Id: INSTALL,v 1.86 2011/05/05 03:48:37 djm Exp $ 264